Food Photography Cumbria and Lancashire

September 2nd, 2019

These were actually taken over four years ago, for Ninos, an Italian restaurant in Cliviger.

The restaurants full title is Ninos at The Fighting Cocks, and my aim wasn’t just to photograph the food, but to capture the ambience of the restaurant. It has a real family feel to the place.

The food arrived straight from the kitchen, and I was shooting whilst the restaurant was busy, which meant the tables either side of me were busy, and I received either questions or advice, depending on which way I faced.

This was a very simple two light setup. One as a key or main light, and one for the specular highlights. It’s the specular highlights that are the most important, as it’s this that creates the “wet” look, and makes the dish appetising, It also “shapes” the food, creating texture and depth within the image.

My accent light, which creates the specular highlight, was placed on the far side of the table, in line with the dish, and high enough to be just out of frame. It was set to fire directly towards the camera, angled downward to the dish. I used a 300Ws location light, firing through a small gridded beauty dish, at an output of 1/16th.

The Main light was to my immediate left, quite close to the table, and angled sharply down. It was another 300Ws location light, firing through an 80x80cm folding softbox at an output of 1/8th.

1/60th sec ISO200 f16

Identical light positions and settings as above. The dish itself is lightly further frame left when compared to the previous image. Looking at it now, I cold have done with reflecting a little more light into the front of the dish, which appears a little dark along the biscuits.

Camera setting are the same.

1/60th sec ISO200 f16

Pretty much the same setup, although I moved around the far side of the table this time. The accent light with the beauty dish is now frame right, as you can see from the specular highlight on the writing. I moved because the cake absorbed far too much of the accent light, but the writing caught it quite nicely. If I had the cake between the writing and the accent light, the cake cut the light with it’s shadow. I also moved the accent light a little further back from the food, which necessitated the increase in aperture to f14 to compensate.

The softbox from what was the key light, nicely provided an overall soft light.

The outputs of both lights remained the same, as was their relevant position to each other. It was simply my position that changed.

1/60th sec ISO200 f14

I usually try and get some form of atmospheric imagery of the chef at work. Sometimes I light it, sometimes I don’t. It all depends very much as to what I’m presented with at the time, and also how I feel the ambience is contributing to the scenario.

Here, it was simply a grabbed shot with ambient lighting, nothing more.

The one thing I do have to watch for is the funky lighting often found in kitchens, where there can be a mix of fluorescent and tungsten. Sometimes, auto white balance does a damned good job. Other times, it seems to throw its hands in the air, and run screaming for the hills.